On 20/Jul/18 00:13, Scott Weeks wrote:
What I meant to say is a lot of folks get connectivity through satellite. 500msec plus and jitter to spare.
Further it's expensive and all the 'busy' sites cost a lot of money to download the stuff folks on this list don't blink an eye at and you can't turn it off. I believe satellite coverage serves a lot of the planet's population.
Agreed. Having ran a satellite-based ISP longer than I have my current fibre-based one, I can safely say that with satellite, speed tests generally tend to be the least of you or your customer's worries. Just simply having a working transmission to/from the bird, and looking for all the cash in the world to service that satellite space segment, is enough of a drama. Would having local CDN caches help satellite-based providers? Sure, particularly in this day & age where classic caches (Squid et al) have nothing against the type of content that's out there. There is a direct relationship between the existence of (submarine) fibre into a country/region, the availability of infrastructure, the eyeball density, the telecoms regulatory regime, and the desire for content operators and CDN's to invest. Even in Africa, parts that now have (submarine) fibre lack the rest of these elements, and are suffering the disinterest from those that create and distribute the content. Mark.